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Show i , f : i!:- :! L : "Be Seein' Y' Soon 1 Hope" of Central U ' V-'- ' A . '.. The Ghost of the Fox .m The only daily newspaper devo ed to the progress and advancement - !' - - k v; A 'A-:-- , : West Germany's - J Tank Superior to Our Own ah and its people 1 MONDAY, JUNE 8, 1959 Watching Congress in Action Many issues are ducked by Watching the members of in action over the year?, even the most charitab! e observers seem to have some mis givings. No realist could lima nne that a legislature with 534 individuals would ever be impervious! to the bombarding pressures which; bear in upon them constantly. The hope always i; that our will rise chosen representative above these pressures! when the national need requires it. Yet the limes when this actua ly happens are crowing more land more iri Con-frre- ss I $ : - freauent. possible exception of session or i.ino ootn uon,-gr- With the the iinal last l So They Say The white man's burden is now not ene of management! but rather one o understanding, and the a$k hag sud denly become truly formidable. ' Dr. Mason W. Gross, president of Rutgers ' University. mark Nearly everyone, except mothers, has had a try at winning the peace. I urge mothers. p (D-Uta- h), exchange vOo often the is! !"!! measure, ; r am convinced that the best service retired general can perform is to turn in his tongue along' with his, suit and mothball his opinions. Gen. Omar Bradley (Ret..), answering criticisms by British Field Marshal Montgomery; gomg-through-- ' i! 4 " I Foreign Minister Gro-- ,' myko proposes to stand fast until the last quarter of an hour. iThe sooner the West makes i tt clear that the last quarter of an hour has I arriyed, the: less ;ime will be wasted. Gromyko'a proposal that Russian troops be added to the Western f& garrison now in West Berlin was not made Mr. Kaltenborn with any! hope that it could be accepted,; But! we could have taken advantage of this offer to propose that w; go back to the earlier phase of the joint occupation of Berlin .when the KommandaturaL made up of the four conquering powers; controlled all Berlin, East as well as West. It is only because: he Russian backed their East German puppets in gov ;rnment out chasing the rf Rast Berlin and turning that sector of the city over to Communist rule,tha the present situation vhas developed.' If the Russians really want to return their troops to Berlin, the simplest way would be to return to the first stage of the occupation when a Social Democratic: Berlin municipal governmert elected by the people of all Berlin administered the entire city from the municipal City Hall in East Berlin, while Britain, France, Russia and the United States maintained small garrisons' in their res pective j sectors; of the united city. It is because the people of Berlin, as well an the people of East Germany, would turA their backsj on communism, if they had a chance vote it out of power that the Soviet Union will not tolerate a unified Berlin or a unified Germany. j Thus, the best we can hope for from Geneva is a continuance o: the status quo Dictator Khruschev sought to upset this seven months ago with his ultiJ matum to the Western powers that they must get their troops out of West BerlinJ We accepted a conference of the! four foreign ministers in Geneva 'only because we feared what might happen with the expiration of this Ultimatum Nothing- has happened in Berlin an nothihg of any importance is likely to happen in Geneva. 'If we continue to make no important concessions to the present meeting, the Russian; dictator! may decide that it would s erve no lm-- i portant purpose-t- o call the summit com ference for which he held such high ' ;: f hopes. In his keenly perceptive new book on Crisis,"; WilT Germany, "The East-We- st liam S. Sehlamm devotes a chapter to communism's decisive challenge to American foreign policy. lie begins it with the wallop-packin- g phrase: "The West's undoing is its cravini for peace.' He argues persuasively that there can be and will be no survival or the West unless it is believably willing to wage war. To .be prepared for ward is not cnoarh. We must convince th Sovist I s . ' all-Berl- in 5 ; - , . r L i - r- the vbung swam etches initials into the baric of trees. In politics J affections are ex pressed differently. The politi- pictures step-by-st- ep We don't really lieve this,' but we act as though we dM. Until the West unites in a courageous decision to walk out of such a futile talkathon; as the one at Geneva, the Communists will continue their victories. is Of the world's population Communist - controlled, hopes to stay neutral, and only a badly divided h is fighting on the side of God andj hum an freedom. The odds are al ready against us. It is high time we lost! our I complacency. (Copyright 1959, General Features Mi Corp) hs O i; ..!!'. "!'. Q Which of Abraham Lincoln's sons died in the White House? A William Wallace died in the White House at the; age of 12. Q What disease! ranks as the nation's greatest killer? A Heart disease. Cancer and leukemia rank second. Bags Under the Eyes Not Always From Loss of Sleep berger Morse By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D. Our appearance to others is Really a matter of great importanceat least; to us. Q My small daughter frequent- - i ' rs j standable incredulity. If I were his boss. I said,i and Morse said ii all those nasty things about me, I'd have rippedi that picture into 80,000 bits and stuffed it in Morse s ballot box. ! man merel Neuberger's smiled. iglits above the Directly threes Senator's suite lies! Morse's re treat. I fully anticipated I'd be greeted at the ioor with a ream of mimeograph ;d press; releases denour.cing this scalawag Neuberger.; But, instead, th:re was th grinning countenance of one Rich; , ,: .:v y has dark circles under her eyes, ut gets pieny oi rest, i nave older people also who have' dark circles" around the eyes and Wonder what this means. A. E. A This is a common enough complaint. According to one discussion of the subject, it is probably the result of thin skin of the lids, a low amount of fatty tissue under the skin, and relatively large Veins in the area. Sometimes the dark circles become more conspicuous in a person who H ill or fatigued from lack of sleepi Apparently, however, the jdark circles! have no real signifi- ance from, the standpoint of ealth. Q Kindly discuss the disease lown as narcolepsy. Mrs. H. T. AThis is a relatively rare and lot too well understood "neuro sis" characterized by, one or more Of the following symptoms: sudden-sleep- , sleep! with dreams, sleep With dreams and double consciousness, trance, and various other j' signs. jit may begin or stop after some Single event such as a severe nose bleed. It Is a chronic condition, jbut may respond to appropriate stimulating drug treatment. .Psy chiatric' investigation of anyone no-ic-ed j this feud. First to Neuberger's domain, He wasn't in. However, there in his private offibe, in one of the most prominent spots on the wall above his desk, hung a glossy photograph of himself and Morse gazing admiringly at each other, "What's that doing there? 1 asked an office aide with under- , : ' j who has this condition is always needed. ard" L. Neuberger, looking down was no berger! illusion; But inked lusion. In fact, in handwriting was this loving, inscription: "To Wayne Morse. With the affectionate regards of his colleague. And for Midge Morse, too. pick, Neuberger, il-bo- ld, j X-ra- y, J Morse's man came by. "When, I inquired, is this picture com- ing down?" Barbs C. In all probability, shock or Injury cannot cause diabetes except when the pancreas is severely injured. It is possible that shock or injury could cause the symptoms to appear earlier than they otherwise would. But the ' weight of evidence is against any direct cause and effect relationship. 0 Don't you think it mean, cruel and inhuman to force people to eat when they are in terrible pain? Miss B. A Yes, except when there ari medical reasons which make it necessary in order to try to save the life of the person in pain. A -- . J drives is just plain lucky. , i J Mash from a silo in an Ohio town made ducks sick. Wonder is they called a quack doctor? ' We're against hitchhiking, but not against other ways of giving j peojTjs Ruth Millett Don't Let That Vacation Trip Become a Headache Making vacation plans? lift. Here the family: Don't plan a more expensive trip that you can afford. If a trip just increases your money wor ries, it isn't; going to be very re laxing. If your vacation plan is to visit either the husband's or wife's family, remember that only one ol you is "going home," so try to see the one who- - isn't doesn't spend all of his time "visiting." If you are taking small children along, shorten your driving days so that the whole family isn't tired and irritable by nightfall. See that every member of the family gets to do something, he especially wants to do. That can usually bt managed with a little 1 mlAijKiiitl.f tlr If you are visiting a part of the country that is new to you read up "on it before your trip so that you'll' have a better idea of what ' there is to do and see, ; While you're on vacation you can't do anything about your problems back home so don't talk about them or worry about them: "I'll worry about that when get home" is the best kind of vaca- tion attitude Do all that you can to keep your i dealings with those who serve you along the way pleasant. If yoj are relaxed and easy to please you'll have more fun than you will by demanding an impossible stand- ard of service. Don't rush or hurry even if you don't see everything. If you come: back from a vacation more tired than when you left home, you've : N j.l ed . " Rolls-Royc- en-gin- e. ; Tell Me Why? f r ; 1 4 ' No Squirrels In Australia ie' dogi. 1 By A. LEOKUM the Britannica Junior encyclopedia for school and home. Send your questions, name, age, address to "Tell Me Win me The squirrel is such a familiar sight to us in parks or in tha country that we might imagine! the United States is 'his home. Actually, there are squirrels in every part of the; world except Australia! In' fact, there are; very many different kinds 'of squirrels i Thy may be as large as cats or as small as mice. They may have soft, warm fur or prickly spines. They may scamper through the branches or glide easily throush he air from treetop to treetop on flaps of skiri that are like parachutes. Some of them even live in the ground. But almost all of them are friendly chattering little animals with long bushy tails and bright beady eyes. Squirrels form a separate family of rodents, or gnawing animals. They are divided into two general groups: the ground squirrels and the . tree squirrels. In the same family as the ground squirrels are ? i 1 : best known tr squirrels are the little red. squir--l rels, the gray squirrels, the fox squirrels, and the tufted-ea- r ' squir.:! rels. , , Tree squirrels, as a rule, spend the' winter in some hollow tre trunk, which they line with leavos and twigs. In the spring they ofte:i build another home high up in the treetops. There' they raise their families of from four: to six The ' ' Why!" care of this paper. Today's winner is: . Connie Smith, 8, Sunnyvale, Calif. woodchucks, chipmunks., and prair- - -- , By HAL COCHRAN The speeder who has wreckless tough-skinn- j j are a few mnts to make that ''two Jweeks off with pay" rewarding for ''' -- - ; information Q According . to from I have been told that I have calcium around my elbow. What can be done to get rid of it? Reader. j; A If it Is not causing any pain' or other trouble, the best thing is to leave it alone. In all probability there is no medicine or other treatment which will eliminate the calcium. It .may have to be removed by surgery ii the symptoms warrant. Q I recently heard that a great shock can bring on diabetes. Is there any truth to this? A friend had an automobile accident and the family claims he did not have diabetes before the shock brought it on. B. ed m. once-denounc- ed j from the office wall The large framed picture, had the honor spot in Morse's bailiwick. Even Harry Truman? s photo, signed "Your good friend and admirer," was tucked behind the door. 1 squinted closer at the Neu-- it tur-ret- 20-m- j pro-fession- i ' pfour family Doctor Wayne; Morse and Richard Neu- - expressed his disdain for the man he helped elect in vitriolic manner 1954 in such that I expected the two to be nangmg eacn oinerj m enigy. Funilamentaliyj the senior man from Oregonj said he's going to get Nuuberger iickKi out by voti-eoi his state in I960 because of the man's "sorry record." The Neuberger sideliners, on the other hafadj Wre saying thi trouble with ;Mdrse is his vanity has been damaged y the refusal the junior Senator to bow and scrape at the riiaster's feet.' I decided to hjop into this affray personally to see what had fueled 0, - r ego n Democrats, Senators hs , -- . i I ; poli- - (Copyright, 1959, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) fending tree. What happens, 1 wondered, when a mutual admiration society between two politician's suddenly crumbles?) What I had in mind was the nasty public! spat that' s flared between those two individualistic j one-fift- Strange bedfellows, these titians. rip ' one-sixt- h - When a swain is scorned, he'll the bark or cut down the of-- Union that; we are willing to fight to maintain freedom in West Berlin. Once again at Geneva the Communists have shown! thatj if there are to be any concessions, we of the West must make them. So far we have made jthem by admitting the East Germans to the conference, jby letting them talk and by letting them issue from the Geneva meeting a daily Communist propaganda, blast. We protested, but we should have in sisted on tossing out the East German Communists and refusing them the privilege! of sitting with us at" conferI' ence table. ' Mi' At Geneva the; Soviet" leaders are not seeking a compromise because they ex-peci a iriumpn. i ney are so sure oi ultimate victory that they will mke no concessions. A 'summit meeting would only provide another opportunity for communists to use tneir propaganaa know-hoTheir patienc e is more enduring than ours, and they! are 'probably can get us to right in j believing they ' We have already yield something. hinted at reducing the ten thousand token troops which the' West has in Ber- We have also talked about making . lin. less use of West Berlin's facilities to propagandize East" Berlin and East Germany. Thus We see communism winning at least minor victories in! Geneva. 'Think of the enormous gains the Reds have won with our help since they took over a defeated Russia in 1917. In that year a mere nanaiui ot Russian uom-- j munis ts led by foreigners just managed to create a! dominant Soviet Council in Leningrad. Today thre are one billion unified Communists. No wonder Khrush- chev can; say with' complete conviction: "We will bury you!' V..;'" j Thirty years ago Soviet Commissar of Education said to me: "We. will make most of our gains without war butulti- mately we must use force to expropriate the private property which you capitalists will refuse to surrender." Like Khruschev, Luna char sky was certain tne uommunists would win many decisive victories before the final Arma-feeddon; History has proved him right Because Communists are convinced that their final victory is inevitable they sometimes use 1 capitalist means to achieve Communist ends. Lenin did that with his new! economic policy in the early 20. Russia had to . have foreign Once help to launch industrialization. Soviet technicians had learned what the Western Engineers could teach them, the foreigners were sacked. Today the Communists are on their way to conquer the world without war. Meanwhile we are so afraid of war that we tolerate! their advance through pienetration, through conferences, through propaganda. The practical con- -! elusion of the pacifist phrase "anything is better than war" 'is "communism is! two-fift- Sure, that's true, he said, but he didn't see where it would alter Neuberger's "a f f ectionate regards" for Morse. 1 cians send autograpnea two-fift- next year?" j j M-4- Q What ishe Delta Plan? A The Netherlands began work in 1958 on a huge "Delta Plan," a gigantic dike to close off tthe mouth of the Rhine River.; Officials hope that the plan would prevent another flood like that in 1953, when of the nation was under water.' M-4- M-4- 1, -- The aide said, "Why should it?" "Is it not true that your boss is out to aeteat Mr. JNeuoerger -- to eabh other. better than war." Q's and A's - By ED kOTERBA WASHINGTON In puppy love in the 'public's confidence. j - i I treadmill A Congress which deals too long and too often m these may one, day find itself facing! a crisis: J . j - l an-wh- ile " one-tim- Public Spat Between Nasty .'li.Morse and NeubergoV I , , Assignment: Woshington w. plu'u . ' on . m z, ng j 7,G2-m- f who-could-- No Hint of Agreement In Geneva : if,; 1 Kaltenborn Edi ts the News By!.!..!H. V. KALTENBORN k '111 :;,!: ft Another week of futile argument ha passed into history at Geneva. !Not eve the phrase "at least; we knbw where w stand" has any real merit because w knew exactly where we stood before the hi-Geneva conference began. Neither private sessions rior public debate has produced progress toward agreem e njt". Russia's , nub-rnichln- e watered-dow- n th ; z, cut the heart from an issue, or never put it in, are a kind of. I ; 'aide-de-cam- half-heart- ed law-maki- 5-t- on .fldc-by--sid- Genuine compromise often is the and key to good governing. Compromises! which of 3-t- on j the the timid stride forward. bill, we now cive mothers a chance. Rep. David S King posing U.S. - Russian , - .' now' " Labor reform, now under severe (assault from many sides in the IIIouscV could this year become an (instance of no action at all. You might ask: "So what's new An all this?" In a sense, not a thing. But the 'point is! that a cumulative inertia appears to have seized Congress, Less and less does! it loolc to the ordinary citizen like an jeffecttvel instrument for positive action in anagt of great stress in human affairs. What CJongr ess has done is to elevate the roundabout approach to the level of a science. Its hall- ngresf-ionayear, action increasingly 4a es on the look of an erratic patchwork, re fleeting a1 crude balance of re- erxmaes to; pressure,, that i'. i is difficult. But the Germans art manufacturing all t h wheeled vehicles for their seven Army divisions. The 0.25-to- n truck (equivalent to our jeep) ii made by the firm called DKW. The 0.75 troop carrier is mad troop-carg- o by Borgward, the 1.50-to- n Mercetruck is made by truck by the Gerdes, the man Ford Company, and the truck by the Mann Company. Germany is also back in the manufacture of ammunition for rifles, pistols and machine gunSv but the firms and cities wherja these; explosives are, made comis u nde classified information, of the troops are nojv Many machine armed with .'guns. .'The guns are World War II stock,, but the calibre is standard-- , ' jzed for all NATO forces, Other NATO nation, and at, least two. not In NATO, are icll- -' ing arns to the Clermont, EarH German infaniryman equipped Shultze-Dewitwar-lik- e FN 'rifle, of with a Belgian-mad- e vlage p a former of Ronw rnflgflzint's ot 20 roun.i iJJut r a Hpanifch firm has mel, atand the pennant of each, a black, tU armed Germany Jjf Iy- devclopf d n VfhicU oncdfearxome eagle, 'fcun Uucd on the fJerv t ' Shultz-Iewlt- z tnan adkuajt rifle of VJii, accord-- j TCHpmtUA volu The KPn Jng to Shullze-Dewlibly to qucitlon by thl reporter almost. ;'sco" an apparl hh gun, lighter 'and fully Hon forming as the! word ext automitic, in regarded as .supera was vision to ljhc Belgian model. 'Mc ior It flowed. citedly e of th? Turkish firms are now supDesert Fox, the plying1 artillery ammunition, respected opponent of Montgom--cr- y and Patton; and he took Belgium, Spain Switzerland, theas the Gerof form well in as and rumbling, shape Turkey, vehicles are fire mans themselves,' hurling armored taking the with which the German state is financial and Industrial burden of munitions making off the Unit- -, this time on our rearming side. ed States, although the Germans, Schiiltze-Dewitz'- s 7 are still receiving and eyes glinted 8 American tanks, all the lawith 4 professional pride as. he test thiiigs. Several German units, a photospoke of the H.S.-3graph of which he showed me.'; a5 large as battalions, have becnj trained in the use of the AmeriIt is an armored infantry personnel carrier, surmounted by a can'" atomic weapon, Honest John. Nuclear explosives are supposed weapon. "I drove it myselfj at the tank training ly ot distributed, but in Amerl- can- po ssession. described he said. lie center,? -To h 2a r this rearmament dethe fighting qualities of the H.S 30 with the verve of an old cavscribed in detail, as only a steed. soldier can, tells tha It his alryman praising is now, fast, quick to maneuver, listener far more than dry statistics or high level briefings. light for pressing bridges, caThe 54 million Germans "of the armament with and federal Republic, augmented by pacious' for ammunition storage. a steady flow from the Eastern than that It is newer anything American! ' troops have, and in sector, are reasserting their na-- J tional individualism. There are many ways superior. At present the ILS.-30- 's ,are persons in only a quarter-millio- n all the three armed forces, and made in Switzerland and powered e with- the British only siiven of the promised 12 Bu plans are forming to divisions at the disposal of NATO. start their, manufacture in the The word you hear in political German industrial city of Hanand diplomatic circles is that the lush over. ; r prosperity and the dreadful American military authorities experience under the Nazis have are delighted at the resurgence combined to make the Germans of the move slowly toward rearmament. and dismantled German war industry, ..This explanation may have some but there is little public validity. It is- - certain that the of it. It take would Germans by their courageous reledge between, three and four years for a tank covery through peaceful methods factory tq set up its machinery ' have achieved a position in Eurand start mass production. The ope which they were unable to of vehicles tracked engineering gain by war. By HOLMES ALEXANDER HEIDELBERG, GERMANY The Desert Fox walks again. Field Marshal Rommel, first and most celebrated of the world's great! tank corps commanders, lives in the men he left behind. One of these is Captain Hermann Shultze-Dewitdeputy liaison officer of the reborn German Army, assigned to the U.S. Army in Europe. Seven times wounded in the African desert warfare under Rommel, dropped behind the American lines in the Battle of the Bulge,ustill partially; crippled In one arm, Capt Shultze-Dewit- z begins to glow asj a martial personality when he talks of the rearmament of his now a NATO ally of country! the United, States, !;: At this headquarters city, the American flag and the West Gere man flag are flying on itaff on the old drill field. Behind the rugged shoulders and z, - policy. os c do- - virtually nothing, Others are in effect sidestepped comthrough resort to slap-das- h promises which never really come to grips with the problem. Sometimes these are almost worse than nothing. They give an illusion of action, while putting ,off decision as to the heart of the matter. Foreign aid is! such an issue. Its friends and enemies find little common foundation, so year! after affair year jproduce a jerry-bui- lt that satisfies nb one and simply postpones the making ofj a sane frig- H.S.-3- 0 ' . i f young. i;v.;-.;'- .: i ; The harmful red squirrel often eats the eggs and young of birds. However, most tree squirrels feed almost) entirely on nuts, acorns, and piQe cones. The squirrels must store up enough food in the fall for their use during the cold months. The flying squirrels differ from all other squirrels in having the skin on their' sides enlarged ints flaps. When the animals stretch' out their legs, these flaps, like', the planes of a1 glider, help them to shoot through the air. Flying squirrels live in warm parts of North jAmerica, Europe and Asia. They are seldom seen, for1 they usuall sleep during the day. Another interesting squirrel is a certain Asiatic squirrel which changes its coloring at the mating season (just as male birds do! J . ' Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch Relieves. Pain New York, N. Y. (Special) - For the first time science has found a new healing substance with the astonishing ability to shrink hemorrhoids, stop itching, and relieve pain without aurgery. In one hemorrhoid case after another'very striking improvement" was reported and verified by doctors' observations. Pain was relieved promptly. And, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction or retraction (shrinking) took place. And most amazing of all 'this improvement was maintained in cases where doctors' observations were continued over a period of many months ! In fact, results were so thorough that sufferers were able to make such astonishing state-rnen- ts a s"Piles have ceased to be a problem!" And among thes n. sufferers wptp vptv wio va riety of hemorrhoid conditions. some oi iu to zu years' standing. All this, without: 1ia nso rf narcotics, anesthetics or astringents of any kind. The secret is a new healing substance e) the of a discovery world-famoresearch institution. Already, is in wide use for. healing- injured tissue on all narts nf fho inis new healing substance: is offered in suppository or oint- -i mem jorm called Preparation . Ask for individually sealed convenient Preparation H or Preparation II ointment with special applicator. Preparation II is sold at all drug counters. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded, (Bio-Dyn- us Bio-Dy- ne - - - sup-positor- rvy. u. f. ies rt. om. ! |